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DfE believes fewer teachers in creative subjects will be needed in the future

Official government figures show the demand for teachers in EBacc subjects is set to soar, indicating the subjects will become mandatory, despite a consultation response on the policy being withheld from publication.

Almost twice as many trainees in geography, for example, are needed next year, while the demand for new teachers in creative subjects will fall by up to 11 per cent in some cases.

The Department for Education (DfE) last week published its initial teacher training allocations for 2017-18. This follows an unprecedented decision not to release them last September.

Among the data was the government’s teacher supply model predictions that reveal how many teachers it presumes should be trained in each subject to meet national demand next year.

These reveal a huge increase in the need for teachers of EBacc subjects, with some estimations nearly doubling.

Associations representing non-EBacc subjects say the figures are “deeply concerning” and criticise the government for “pre-judging” the outcome of the delayed EBacc consultation.

The EBacc is a performance measure based on pupils’ grades in five subjects: English, mathematics, history or geography, the sciences (including computing) and a language.

The DfE launched a consultation in November 2015 on its plans to make 90 per cent of pupils study the EBacc curriculum at GCSE, but the results are still to be published.

The new teacher supply predictions, however, show that ministers are expecting a steep demand for teachers in the five compulsory subjects.

The number of would-be geography teachers has leapt 97 per cent, from 778 in the last academic year to 1,531. History places increased 42 per cent from 816 to 1,160.

EBacc is reducing the demand for design and technology in schools despite wider demand for these skills from UK industry

Meanwhile, the number of places for trainees in design and technology has fallen 11 per cent from 848 in 2016-17 to 751 next year. Demand for new teachers in food technology is also down 11 per cent from 186 to 166.

Julie Nugent, chief executive of The Design and Technology Association, said the “continued impact” of the EBacc was “reducing the demand for design and technology in schools despite the wider demand for these skills from UK industry”.

The number of places for art & design trainees dropped 9 per cent from 633 to 577; music and drama also fell. All the subjects were also affected by a decrease in take-up by pupils.

Last year 39.6 per cent of pupils took the five EBacc subjects, compared with 23 per cent in 2012.

Meanwhile, the number of pupils taking GCSEs in creative arts and technical subjects last year fell 8 per cent, while the number taking at least one arts-based GCSE fell 1.7 per cent.

The new predictions for initial teacher training also come as school leaders face staff restructures forced by diminishing schools budgets.

Delta Academies Trust, formerly the School Partnership Trust Academies, lost more than 100 staff last year and removed a number of creative subjects from its curriculum to prioritise the more academic subjects found in the EBacc.

The decision was made after the cash-strapped trust expressed fears children were studying too many subjects and schools were “overstaffed”.

A spokesperson for the Bacc for the Future campaign said: “The government must act quickly to address this decline by reforming or withdrawing the EBacc and by not pre-judging the outcome of the consultation.”

A spokesperson for The Council for Subject Associations said the predicted increase in demand for EBacc subject teachers was “clearly being prioritised even though future policy is yet to be confirmed and the government is still to respond to the EBacc consultation”.

I have a feeling that the DfE and the Brexit department are not on the same page with planning the future workforce needs of the UK.

With immigration destined to reduce after Brexit, the sensible plan being expounded is to train our own young people in the skills that we are short of.
So to further this aim of being self-sufficient in technical skills, the DfE are increasing the number of Geography Teachers, and killing off Design and Technology Teaching (amongst other subjects).

At the current rate of progress with this EBacc programme, in 5 years time we will have to import skilled Technologists, Artists, Musicians etc from outside the EU, whilst our own young people who would love to have a job in these areas, will be qualified in GCSE Geography.

AssemblyTube, you are too kind regarding the DfE and the Three Brexiteers. None of them have a clue and the big worry for me would be that the traditional way of compensating for schools having too narrow a curriculum offer – the FE route – has been sabotaged.

Educationalists and politicians etc do not understand the importance of Art and Design education. Students who undertake it end up approaching the world in adaptable, diversive, creative ways. They work in Theatre,TV, Music, Fashion, Design, Textiles etc etc Its not always a straight line from study towards a career. The whole point is that a good Art and Design course will develop an adaptable person who approaches the world in a divergent way.Losses of courses in these areas of study all over the country which effects school courses too will have a devastating effect on our society and limit the educational development of our children.